Sgt Beavis
Well-known member
Not at all surprising. It doesn’t bother me either. It would have been a bonus had Ford done it.
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For those of you with X-Plan, if you go to the fordpartner.com web site and enter your partner code you can see X-Plan availability for all Ford/Lincoln vehicles. Both the Mach-E and the Maverick show as eligible with X-Plan prices available for the various trim options. Interestingly for the last couple weeks, maybe longer, the F-150 (ICE) has given the message: "Pricing for this vehicle is temporarily not available. Please see your dealer for pricing details." The Lightning has never been listed. Not sure why the ICE F-150 is not there, it always had been (with the exceptions of some models).
Google.Can anyone share a partner code to check prices?
YYou will need to produce the PIN at the time of delivery. If you have a PIN now go ahead and cancel it.This is my first time using the reservation/order process for a car. usually just walk in and buy. I'm about a year out with my reservation number (18,400).
Assuming tomorrow is order day, when do i give a dealer my A-Plan pin? do i need it ready when ordering, or do i need it when they get it delivered and i pick it up? Pins are only valid for 30 days so i'm not going to waste time generating one if i don't need right away. Thanks in advance.
Yes, Google is your friend. There are a lot of organizations that put it out there for their members. Mine is two letters followed by three numbers.Can anyone share a partner code to check prices?
This right here. It may not be that much, but if Ford would have allowed X-Plan on the Bronco they wouldn't have the complete and total cluster F they have on their hands right now.My understanding is that X-plan is "invoice +" pricing which won't make much difference if invoice = MSRP as has been reported. The biggest advantage I saw with X-plan was the assurance against ADM.
This actually makes sense from what we have seen about MSRP/Invoice pricing...Regardless, it’s an interesting move on Ford’s part given the fact that the Mach-E was eligible for the special discount, though the Bronco was not. However, as the automaker pointed out in the bulletin, this exemption could stem from the fact that the F-150 Lightning has a far more complex invoice pricing structure than ICE-powered F-150 models. “Due to system calculation formulas, printed X-Plan Price may be higher than MSRP,” the automaker notes.
Sounds like BS. The simple fact is that F150L is much more popular than MME was. Same with Bronco.This article on Ford Authority makes an interesting statement as to why x-plan is not available:
This actually makes sense from what we have seen about MSRP/Invoice pricing...
If Ford would have offered X-Plan why would it have been a cluster? This is just out of curiosity. We actually did X-Plan on Bronco and had no issues.This right here. It may not be that much, but if Ford would have allowed X-Plan on the Bronco they wouldn't have the complete and total cluster F they have on their hands right now.
Depends on how you look at it... you are paying $2000 less that everyone else which I bet isn't much different for other trucks when you factor in the "discounts" most folks get on the average truck. You may be used to paying $6000 under MSRP but nobody every paid MSRP in the old model. I certainly wouldn't complain about paying less than than the average person pays.As a dealer employee we are really getting hit hard on this invoice structure. For example, on a 2021 F150 with a $73105 MSRP my D-plan price would be $67330(about $5800 discount)This is in addition to any other rebates available. A $73000 Lightning will cost me around $71,600(assuming $1695 Dest charge).
I assume you pass the destination charge onto the purchaser. How do you come to the roughly $70K cost for a $73k MSRP Lightning?As a dealer employee we are really getting hit hard on this invoice structure. For example, on a 2021 F150 with a $73105 MSRP my D-plan price would be $67330(about $5800 discount)This is in addition to any other rebates available. A $73000 Lightning will cost me around $71,600(assuming $1695 Dest charge).
It's actually 1400 dollars but that really was not my point. The invoice structure and dealer payment structure appears to be a huge win for the dealer at the cost of discounts across the board aand the loss of X-Plan completely.Depends on how you look at it... you are paying $2000 less that everyone else which I bet isn't much different for other trucks when you factor in the "discounts" most folks get on the average truck. You may be used to paying $6000 under MSRP but nobody every paid MSRP in the old model. I certainly wouldn't complain about paying less than than the average person pays.